Lost white gold wedding ring, FOUND! Brigantine, New Jersey By Ringfinder Jeffrey Laag




If you have lost something, please call right away. The longer you wait, the less the chance of a recovery. Steve Smith 310-953-5268
Yun called me to ask if I could help find his wedding ring. He had been at Muscle Beach in Santa Monica on the equipment, and put his ring in his pocket. After he was done he reached into his pocket to retrieve the ring, and with the flick of his hand, his ring flew into the sand. Although he searched diligently for it, it was nowhere to be found. We arranged a time to meet there, and I was on my way.
When I got there Yun, his new bride (they were on their honeymoon from South Korea), and his friend Tae met me to show me where the loss occured. I began my search covering the area showed to me, finding some small pieces of metal, but not the ring. Then I began to widen the search area going out grid line by grid line. I got a great double signal steady in the headphones, put the scoop in, and had the ring. Yun and his bride were very happy, and thankful to have the ring back, and it was great that their honeymoon was not spoiled. Their rings matched, which was nice.
Received a phone call from Parshant late last evening. He and his brother and family had spent the day at Cobourg beach when disaster struck. While playing volleyball in the water, he felt and saw his 22k gold wedding band fly off his finger while hitting the ball. After a frantic search for over an hour, they manage to find me via the Ringfinder’s website. I gathered all the required equipment and headed to Cobourg beach. The issue was that they couldn’t quite remember exactly where the ring had fallen off and ended up with a very large search area. After searching for over an hour and a half, it was now dark. I decided to come back the following morning for a fresh start. As this beach is heavily hunted by metal detectorists, and following a long weekend with Canada day festivities, I had to find this ring ASAP. Using grid markers along the shore, I was able to grid the area properly and within thirty minutes, I finally was able to scoop the ring out of the water and return it to its rightful owner this evening. Another happy ending and beautiful day at the beach. Life is good.


Please don’t wait any longer because time will induce variables that will make the recovery of your lost item more difficult! Steve 310-953-5268
Alan called asking for help in finding a ring his wife had lost in their back yard. I was doing a search in a burned home in the Palisades at the time of the call, and told Alan I would be able to help him after I was finished.
When I got there Alan introduced me to his wife Ronnie, and she took me to the backyard showing me the area of the loss. It wasn’t very big, but the grass was tall and thick which would hide a ring easily. I began my search working the open area with no luck. Then I began working around some pots and pallets in the area. At the corner of one of the pallets I received a solid signal, put my pinpointer in, and found her ring. It had been her grandmother’s ring, and she became very emotional when I gave it back to her. It turned out to be a great day.
If you just lost a ring or any other type of jewelry, give me a call 305-608-1870 (Louis). I have a metal detecting service and can come out and help you find your lost item (whether it’s in the sand, water, or backyard). In the pictures below, Nicole had lost 3 rings at the beach, she put them on her towel and forgot they were on there and later reached for the towel and they all went flying. She was able to find 2 of the rings but the last one buried itself in the sand. She called me and luckily I was close by and was able to quickly recovery her missing ring 🙂 check out my other posts of my over 100 successful recoveries.



Metal Detector service for Cardiff Beach to help you find your lost precious jewelry. Don’t rent! Call Curtis Cox @ 760-889-2751
Recently another text for help to find a lost wedding band buried in the sand beeped on my cell phone after 9pm… This day & age it’s best for me to search the area immediately due to an influx of newbie hobby detectorist’s scanning all hours of the day & night. Typically rings lost in the San Diego beach sands last 0-2 days in the summer before it is found & gone forever. That is why contacting me immediately increases the chance of finding your precious jewelry before them.
However, This small beach named Seaside reef located in Cardiff San Diego county has a gated entrance not open after sunset. So after some questions & concerns we agreed to meet there in the morning just after the parking lot opened up.
Promptly arriving with my metal detector equipment as planned,Sammy text me she was running 10 min behind with a description of the exact place to search until she got there.
As I was patiently preparing with plenty of time to kill,,I looked 30’ across in the parking lot to my amazement another person was gearing up with his metal detector to search this same small beach!
So I darted over to stake the claim on a 10×10’ small area,,Kindly leaving him with the entire rest of the beach & trash buried there..Is when this lost wedding band was saved from the sands in a matter of a few precious minutes! She was so relieved as you can see this wedding ring with inscriptions meant a whole lot to them.
Don’t wait too long as a new gold rush of detectorist’s are raiding California beaches for booty treasure & Youtube content. Your buried keepsake could be gone forever!
Cardiff beach Metal Detector. “Who ya gonna call?” Curtis Cox 760-889-2751
Contact me for all your metal detecting and recovery needs. Rob 402-580-6933. Land, water, cracks in concrete, rings, keys, hearing aids, phones, etc. Helping law enforcement. Serving Lincoln and the greater Nebraska area.
Haley had gone to a party at a house on a sand pit lake. While she was in the water her engagement ring fell off. These sand pits drop off quickly. She just happened to be close to the edge of that drop off. She was in water about 48 inches deep, I later found her ring at a depth of 13 foot. Panic and dispare set in as she realized what happened. A few people came with metal detectors and a local in a dive club dove and did a visual, all with no success. Eventually the wedding came and with it did a new ring, but it just wasn’t the same one. The one he picked out, the one he got down on one knee in the sunset of Hawaii. Fast forward a few years, I came across her original social meadia post and messaged about it. Time came to execute a recovery plan that I was thinking about all winter. It was my honor to return such a special ring back to Haley. Life is hard, together lets make smiles!





Donna contacted me to help search her burned Altadena home.
I was able to help recover quite a lot for her and her husband Anthony including:
- Her late father’s Dog Tag from military service
- 8 large silver dollar coins
- 4 rings
- 17 assorted pieces of jewelry including bracelets, earrings, chains, and a belt buckle
- 6 pieces of silver flatware
- A half bucket of quarters, dimes, nickels, and pennies
…and numerous other items including ceramics, keys, and other jewelry melted together
It was a very successful search for them.
I received a text right at noon saying, “I don’t know if this is the right number, but I found it online for a ring finder at Myrtle Beach. I lost my tungsten wedding ring in the waves out at the beach near 19th Ave south and Southern Breeze Oceanfront. Is there any possible chance it could even be found, or would the undertow and waves at about 3 feet deep have carried it out?” I called the attached number and talked to Logan and asked him what time he lost it. He said about an hour before his text. I looked up the tide table for Myrtle Beach and high tide was at 11:27 am. Perfect, the tide had changed, so I told him there was a great chance of finding it and I’d be there at 3 pm. That would put me there right at mid-tide.
Right around 2 pm, I was getting antsy, so I text him saying I was on my way. With this being Sunday, I was concerned the beach would be packed with tourist and there wouldn’t be any parking. I got lucky with both and met Logan on the beach. He showed me the area and explained that he was about knee deep. He also made a comment about getting hit in the back with a wave. This confused me a little, in that I thought he may have been deeper than he thought with an outgoing tide. He gave me the north and south boundaries, and I started an east/west perpendicular to the beach grid line. After almost an hour and a half of searching and extending my search area on all four sides, I was coming up with nothing. Towards the end I was going in the ocean knee deep at mid tide. I went so far as asking a lady, who’d been on the beach longer than I was, if she saw anybody else with a detector. I also asked the lifeguard if anybody had turned in a ring. I was whooped, both mentally and physically. I called Logan and told him I couldn’t find it. I could tell in his voice he was hurt that I couldn’t find his ring.
I drove a couple of blocks towards home and remembered I had brought a second detector, which I usually do as a back-up. I called Logan back and told him I was going back to try again with a different detector. Logan had already called his wife, who’ll be here later this week, and told her he lost it, I was going to search, and then that I couldn’t find it. So, they were both on a little bit of a roller coaster ride.
I walked back out on the beach with a second wind and started a north/south grid line. About 30 minutes later I hit a target with a VDI (visual display indicator) of 18, exactly what a man’s Tungsten wedding band would show up as. No doubt in my mind that I had Logan’s ring. Took a scoop of sand, dumped in out on the beach, and moved the sand with my foot. There it was! I took a picture and sent to Logan saying, “Found it!! I’ll drop it off.” He responded instantly, “Oh my GOD. Thank you so much!! I don’t know if I just missed it on my first search or my southern boundary wasn’t far enough, regardless of how or why, the ring was found and returned.
Logan – So happy I got your treasure back where it belongs. Enjoy the rest of your vacation.
Jim
